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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1911)
pagb rmc FIFTY HINTH OREGON ANNUAL CONFERENCE YOUR ATTENTION IS DIRECTED TO OUR Women's Tailored Waists DAILT CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON. MONDAY, SET! EMBER 18, 1911. W'f x J4?sJ' f 'hi AT $1.50 TO $15.00 EACH 3i The materials are fine Madras, Durable Linen and Dainty Lawn, The models are tiigh neck, long sleeves, plain tucks and mat embroidered. Many are effectively trimmed in a fetching fanner, Now that you are aware(of the merchandise in this event let us tell you about the va riety, All the most advanced models are embraced and the display is most complete. The workmanship is of such character that you will immediately recognize the splendid value for the prices asked, All the detail work is carefully brought out, As a result we are in a position to offer you this superb collection of tailored waists for women at a price range that no matter what its level, represents quite a tidy saving, Every model is individual and portrays the most recent touches of fashion, The variety of styles is so broad that every woman in Salem can be pleased, Remember, that no matter whai price you pay you will receive far more than your. money's worth in service and style, Grade of prices from $1.50 to $15.00 Ready-to-Wear Ready-to-Use S Quality Merchandise Popular Prices. The U. G. Shipley Company 145-147 NORTH LIBERTY STREET, SALEM ALL AKRAXJEMESTS COMl'LET EI FOR THE BIG CONFERENCE AND 40(1 MINISTERS AND DELE GATES ARE EXPECTED TO BK IX ATTENDANCE. Committees appointed to make ar rangements for the fifty-ninth Oregon I annual conference of the Methodist I Episcopal church to be held in this city nt the First Methodist church I September 20-25, are now completing 'the details of their plans and when I the convention swings into session '. on the morning of the first day, j everything will be in readiness. The conference will be attended by 'about 400 ministers and delegates, land arrangements are being made for accomodations for them at the ho tels in tho city and at private homes. Since the last convention here there has been established the Old People's Home, the Leslie Church in South Salem, and the Lee Mission church in North Salem, and these places will be visited and inspected by the delegates. Dr. Avison, pastor of the First church, will likely be retained by the conference. He came to the city several months ago from Minnesota. The last quarterly conference passed resolutions asking that he be re tained and also that Presiding Elder James Moore of this district be al lowed to remain. The following is the program for tomorrow. Tuesday. 7:30 p. m The Epworth League. A. A. Heist, Presiding. Address, C. W. Williams, Minister First Church, Lewiston, Idaho. '. o HE JUST WANTS TO GET EVEN ON LAFERTY Lai kiii Electric Hose If you watch a man spraying his lawn for about two minutes you can tell whether he has confidence in the hose or not. If he keeps glancing from one end of it to the other you can depend that he's getting nervous and is watching for a wetting. Don 't take chances when you can buy Electric Hose and be absolutely sure of the highest efficiency. Electric Hose will not burst, crack or split. It's made of seamless seine twine jackets and rubber tubes. SALEM HARDWARE COMPANY CASCARETS CLENSE . LIVER AND BOWELS Xo liilioiiMioss, Headache, Sick, Sour Stomach, Indigestion, Coated Tongue or Constipation. ((ttt'l"Mt't"" Damon & Son GROCERS I FIGHTING THE COMBINE - t Your grocery money goes farthest here. Everybody can see that our j T expense account is less than the expense accoiirft of the merchant in I the high-rent district. If we give you the benefit of this expensive t diSerence, will it not show in the price of your groceries each week? J We give you this benefit and that's why at our reduced prices we sell you a better line of groceries and provisions than you can buy t elsewhere for the same money, and this is one reason why grocery ? money goes farthest at the CUT-PRICE STORE. TOMORROW AT DAMON'S t Perfection Flonr k....l.0 I Superior Hard Wheal t Olympic Hard Wheal u;i J Piciilr 1 In ins. ner pound l'e 5 liars Fels Xaplliu Soap for -v BartW-tt Pears, just right for canning, and fancy our price, per bushel 5 lbs. Small While Beans for '-'J0 "Damon's Best" Creamery Butter ' " ' ,7 e5c Schram Fruit Jars, "the wide mouth kind," pints, .c; -gal , $1,111 per dozen. Ouv economical business methods, buying and selling for cash, en able us to sell groceries for less money than credit stores. vpiT Tti'uvmv Tn AW PART OF THE CITY. IMione 68 THE C. 0- D. STORE 239 X. Liberty St. t MHIIHOIII OIIIOKilHIH Our Name, Our Guarantee When our name Is placed upon any bottle of medicine, it repre sents our guarantee of purity, strength, quality and efficiency. On prescriptions, it represents the purest, highest and full strength In gredients compounded with skill, accuracy and despatch. Bring your doctor's prescriptions to us or let us fill your special receipts. Perry's Drug Store the Rexan store THE OFFICER THINKS HE HAS THE BURGLARS Satisfied that two men arrested at Woodburn on the charge of drunken-, ness and disorderly conduct, are the two burglars who perpetrated the Romaine burglary a few weeks ago, Day Officer Burkhardt had "John Doe" warrants issued for them today and they wll be brought back here to stand trial on a charge of bur glary. The home of F. M. Romaine, situ ated a few miles north of the city, was burglarized recently of a watch, a locket, some money, a watch fob, and some Indian arrow heads. Yes terday whle glancing over a daily pa per Day Officer Burkhardt noticed that two men had been arrested at Woodburn and that there were found on them some arrow heads. The two had held up a man as he was driving to Woodburn and made him give them a ride. He had intended to prefer a charge of carrying con cealed weapons against them but upon finding that they were wanted here for burglary, decided to prefer the minor charge of drunkenness so as to hold them until an officer could arrive from here and take them into custody. o A ROSEBURG WOMAN HAS AN AFFINITY Portland's Popular Fire-Proof Hotel THE OREGON The House of Comfort Combined With Elegance Our Rathskeller Grill finest dining service in city, with Hawaiian orchestra from 6 to 12 ivloTt perfectly furnished, moderate priced, modem hostelry in the metropolis of the Northwest WRIGHT & DICKINSON HOTEL CO. Owners and Managers. Also Operating Seattle Hotel, Seattle. UNITED HUBS LEASED WIRE. San Francisco, Sept. 18. Mrs. Bida Chessebro, wife of a railroad employe at Roseburg, Or., Is held here today by the police on a charge of living with Willis S. Simpson, a rancher of Roseburg, with whom it is said she fled to San Francisco with her two children, aged nine and 4. The cou ple are said to have been living un der the name of Mr. and Mrs. Cleve land and are charged with a statu tory offense. Mrs. Chessebro said she left home because her husband abused her. Of flcals of Roseburg were notified to- I day. o FIGHT AGAINST WELCH. (Continued from page one.) does not look like holding a fran chise merely for speculative purposes Mayor Lachmund's Position. The fight to annul the Welch franchises, headed by Mayor Jach mund, is undoubtedly undertaken In an effort to protect the city, but against whom an in whose interest? Saying to A. Welch give up one of rour tracks on Front street, or we I will annul your whole franchise, or saying to him you cannot build sid ines on Front strei.-t, unless yri put In a common user .clause for the Ore- I Is a similar provision In tbe Oregon Electric franchise on the streets of 'this city. The matters Invohred will I be threshed out in the cases before I Judge Galloway this week by able i counsel. , I o I Aviator Atwood says it is danger Igus forione to sneeze when operat i Ing an aeroplane. Aviation is noth ' ing to be sneezed at anyway. j o A deaf-mute in Iowa stepped on the business end of a tack and Im ! mediately regained his speech. It's I an even wager that his first utter I ances were sharp and to the point. Blaming Peter . Laferty, a half breed Indian, for his intoxication and arrest by the police Saturday night, David Smith, an Indian, residing near the city, nppeared before Judge Webster this morning and swore to a complaint charging Laferty with sell ing liquor to an Indian. When questioned Smith stated that he wanted the whiskey In fact that he was glad to get it, and that the ar rest was a matter only of getting re venge on Laferty, and beating his wife to making a complaint against him. According to his story, Lafer ty got some whisky and Smith and others welt to Laferty's home, which is near the city limits. Indulging in the liquid too heavily, they seem to have become boisterous, and Laferty, so Smith says, had him arrested and thrown in jail. h' "It cost me some jmoney," he said this morning. "I have a wlfp and family to support, and I wait to get even with him for having me 'thrown in Jail- If I did not have him ar rested, my wife ( would anyway. "What do wou think of a man." he concluded, "who will give another whisky and then have him arrested?" After the papers were made out, Smith went away happy, agreeing to be on hand in the morning with an other witness to prosecute the case to see to it that Laferty gets the full penalty provided by the law. o UNKNOWN MAN KILLED BY EARLY TRAIN While sitting on the track of the Southern Pacific Railroad company , near the Tom Davidson place, an un- j known man was struck by the engine of the early morning passenger train j today and his mangled remains! hurled Into a ditch by the side of the j track. The engine struck the man full and square, breaking an arm and one hip, and death came instant ly. ! Because of the . dense fog at the hour of the accident about 8 o'clock, the engineer did not see the man un-, til the train was almost upon him. When he observed htm, he was sit- j ting on the track and was either In a drunken Btupor or intended to com- j mlt suicide. The engineer blew the whistle and applied the emergency brakes but he was unable to either atouse the man or stop the train. j o Identification Marks. Coroner Clough arrived upon the scene a few moments afterwards and : took the body Into custody. There : was found upon the dead man's per son nothing but a broken whsky bot- tie which was shattered when the en- j glne hit him. There was no slip of paper nothing "by which identifica tion can be affected. The dead man is about 35 years of age; has a red mustache, brown hair j and gray eyes. The clothing was I that of a laborer. I Wth the hope that some one may I be abl e to Identify him, Coroner Clough will hold the remains for several days at the Lehman & Clough Undertaking Parlors. o Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, Indi gestion, Sallow Skla and Miserable Headaches come from a torpid liver and clogged bowels, which cause your stomach to become filled with undi gested food, which sours and fer ments like gnrbage In a swill barrel. That's the first step to untold misery Indigestion, foul gases, bad breath, yellow sklni, mental fears, everything that Is horrible and nauseating. A Cascaret tonight will give you a j thorough cleansing inside and i straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep a 10-cent box brom your druggist will keep you feeling good for months. Millions of men and women take a Cascaret now and then to keep their stomach, liver, and bowela regulated, and never know a miserable moment. Don't forget tho children their lit tle Insides need a good, gentle cleans ing, too. o Itamlit Arrested. Buenos Ayres, Sept. 16. William Perkins, said to be one of a band ot American outlaws, who have befen operating In the Chuhut territory for ten years, is under arrest here to day. He came to the city to obtain medical assistance. The bandits are headed by Harry Longbaugh, alias the "Sundance Kid," am ex-convict, of Sundance, Wy .o o . Chamberlain's Collo, Cholera and Diarrhoea remedy Is today the best known medicine in use for the re lief and cure of bowel complaints. It cures gripping, diarrhoea, dysentery. and should be taken at the first un natural loosentss of tht bowels. It is equally valuable for children and adults. It always cures. Sold by all dealers. o Fifteen million flies have been de stroyed by the fly swatters, but you wouldn't thjnk It, would you? o Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C ASTO R I A ON THE Free List THE TARIFF WILL BE RE.lIOTEDjDURING THE STATE FAIR AT SALEM, FROM THE FAMOUS Calapooya Mineral Water AND Common Colds Mnst fie Taken Seriously For unless cured they sap the vitality and lower the vital resistance to more serious Infection. Protect your child ren and yourself by the prompt use of Foley's Honey and Tar Compound and note its quick and decisive re sults. For coughs, cold, croup, whoop ing cough, bronchitis and affections of the throat, chest and lungs It Is an ever ready and valuable remedy. Re member the name, Foley's Honey and Tar Compound and refuse substitutes. The genuine Is In a yellow package. Red Cross Pharmacy (H. Jerman). o Journal "Want Ads" Bring ResuiU Calapooya Saline THE CONDENSED SMILE OF CALAPOOIA WATER, Every Visitor Is Invited to Call nt the Calapooya Itooth at the Fair and Test Their Merits Without Money and Without Trice. Calapooya Mineral Water Is a mu rated saline water, equal to any of the renowned spring waters of Europe and America Recommended by leading phy sicians of the United States for Kheamatlxin, Kidney and Llrer afflictions, Dyspepsia, Indiges tion, and all forms of Stomach, Skin and Blood diseases. Hun dreds of people "given up" of long standing ailment by Calapooya Water. Testimonials on application. Sold by all dealers, or shipped In cases di rect from the springs. Write for prices. Hotel Cnlupooyu, London, open the year round. Or- Calapooya Springs Co. Cottage Grove, Oregon. BRANDEGEE KINCA1D & CO CLOTHES. DON'T SPECULATE IN OVERCOATS If it is customary for you to pay $10 or $25 or any price between the two for an Uvercoat, don t speculate purchase posi tive value, an overcoat which you are absolutely certain will give satisfaction. While you have cash to spend, be sure to interest yourself in our clothes. Remem ber, there is a limit to quality but not always to price. Our prices are within proper bounds. SHIRTS We wish to call your special attention to our new Flan nel Shirts. We have a large variety of blues and grays ,single or double breasted at from $1.50 to $2.90 Tan Flannels with military collar, two pockets, eo oe extra good $LLo Corduroys at $2,00 and French Flannels from 90c up. MORE SWEATERS We have another large lot that we would like to show you. These women's sweater coats are exceptionally good, made with popular Lord Byron collar, in cardinal, oxfords, navy andM C(WACC white. You will like these at from .vdv lv v) DOMESTICS This department is loaded with winter necessities of the best grade the market affords and of assort ments large and varied. See the pretty patterns of our "Duckling Fleece" for Kimonas at 2lc, 15c and 18c yard A new lot of Velvet Hand Bags, plain 'or with trim ming at from $1.40 to $2.50 (37- OA s